1 / 14

Tutorial 3 Fly Out Tool Move Objects Command Line

Tutorial 3 Fly Out Tool Move Objects Command Line . By Hamsa Khamis. ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II. Fly Out Tool . Fly Out Tool

ella
Télécharger la présentation

Tutorial 3 Fly Out Tool Move Objects Command Line

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tutorial 3 Fly Out Tool Move Objects Command Line By HamsaKhamis ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  2. Fly Out Tool • Fly Out Tool • A button on a toolbar may include additional command buttons in a fly-out toolbar. Usually the fly-out toolbar contains variations on the base command. After you select a button on the fly-out the fly-out disappears. • Instructions: • Buttons with fly-outs are marked with a small white triangle in the lower right corner. To open the fly-out toolbar, hold down the left mouse button for a moment or press the right mouse button, The lines toolbar is licked to the Main 1 toolbar. If you hold the left mouse button down over the Line button of the Main 1 toolbar, the fly-out Lines toolbar opens. “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  3. Move Objects • Move Objects • Then moving tool help you move an objet from one spot to the other… • Instructions: • Select objects • Pick a point to move from • Pick a point to move to “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  4. Tutorial 4 Loft Nurbs Rotate Camera By Margarita Salas ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  5. Loft • Loft Normal : • Creates a surface fit through selected profile curves that define the surface shape. The surface has a "normal" amount of stretching between the curves. • Instructions: • First create a set of lines or any type of shape. In the command line write “loft” and hit enter. • It will then tell you to select the lines you wish to loft, select both lines and hit enter. • A small screen will appear informing you the type of style you want the loft to appear. For this example pick normal and press “ok”. • Your end product should look like this or similar. “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  6. Loft • Loft Developed: • Creates a separate developable surface or polysurface from each pair of curves. • Instructions: • Just like the previous slide, create two lines and in the command line write “loft” and hit enter. Select both lines and click enter. • Once the screen appears, instead of selecting “normal”. Pick the style “Developable” and click ok. • This style will change the design and develop a “flattened” appearance. “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  7. Nurbs: • The word NURBS is an acronym for non-uniform rational B spline. Non uniform rational B splines can represent 3 D geometry. • Shortcut: F10, this will activity the Nurbs (points) in any shape, line, etc. “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  8. Rotate View: This function allows you to change your view point in perspective. It provides an easy method to navigate your position in a 3 dimensional view. “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  9. Tutorial 5 Snap Options View Ports Rotate View By Lin ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  10. Shortcuts • Rotate view • Ctrl + Shift + drag with the right mouse button. • Pan • Shift + drag with the right mouse button. “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  11. Snap options • Snapping is simply a helper for accuracy. Notice how my cursors kind of stickies for the grid intersections. • End: When this is checked, your cursor snaps to the end of all objects, lines, edges, surfaces… • Near: When this is checked, your cursor snaps near any object. That means you can create lines on other edges, or anywhere where some other object already resides. • Point: Snaps to Point objects only. • Mid: Snaps to middle of lines, curves, edges. • Cen: Snaps to center of an object, usually if you have some curvy objects, it determines where the center of it is. Center of arc, circle, or similar. • Int: Snaps on intersection of objects. Lines and edges usually. • Perp: If you want to start (or end) a line but make it perpendicular to some reference line, this is what you need. • Tan: If you are creating a line that needs to be tangent on circle or similar, this is it. • Quad: Snaps to quads. • Knot: Snaps to knots. “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  12. Viewport: • 4 Viewports button: reset 4 views back to original position • Select different mode to see the object in different mode “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  13. Tips By Lin ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

  14. Thank You For Your Time • Tips: • For any additional information regarding the commands mention or any other, click on the help button on top of the screen or click on F1. “Rhino Presentation” ARCH 1291 VISUAL STUDIES II

More Related